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  1. Franz Pfeffer von Salomon

    Franz Pfeffer von Salomon

    SA officer

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  1. Franz Pfeffer von Salomon (19 February 1888 – 12 April 1968) during the Nazi regime known as Franz von Pfeffer, was the first Supreme Leader of the Sturmabteilung (SA) after its re-establishment in 1925. Pfeffer resigned from his SA command in 1930 and was expelled from the Nazi Party in 1941. He died in 1968.

  2. Franz Pfeffer von Salomon, meist kurz Franz von Pfeffer (* 19. Februar 1888 in Düsseldorf; † 12. April 1968 in München ), war ein deutscher Offizier und Politiker. Er war Offizier im Ersten Weltkrieg und Gutsbesitzer, Führer des „ Freikorps Westfalen“, NSDAP -Funktionär, Oberster SA-Führer und Reichstagsabgeordneter .

  3. May 22, 2017 · When the National Socialist German Workers’ Party (NSDAP) became the second strongest party in the Reichstag elections of 14 September 1930, the political career of Franz Pfeffer von Salomon was already over. Two weeks prior, he had resigned from the supreme leadership of the Nazi stormtroopers (SA), a position he had occupied between late ...

    • Daniel Siemens
    • 2017
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  5. Franz Pfeffer von Salomon during the Nazi regime known as Franz von Pfeffer, was the first Supreme Leader of the Sturmabteilung (SA) after its re-establishment in 1925. Pfeffer resigned from his SA command in 1930 and was expelled from the Nazi Party in 1941. He died in 1968.

  6. The new Storm Commander, Franz Pfeffer von Salomon, brought in a uniform for the SA which he had located in a warehouse in Austria and had been destined for German troops in East Africa.

  7. The Bavarian ban was lifted in February 1925 after Hitler pledged to adhere to legal and constitutional means in his quest for political power. See Verbotzeit. Though charged with the leadership of the SA in August 1926, Pfeffer von Salomon was not formally appointed Oberster SA-Führer until 1 November 1926. [3]

  8. Jun 29, 2007 · The Nazi activist Franz Pfeffer von Salomon formulated the logical implications of this qualitative vision of human worth for “inferior” life-forms with unnerving lucidity: “Trees which do not bear fruit should be cut down and thrown into the fire.”